Matthews v. Citizens Bank

46 S.W.2d 161, 329 Mo. 556, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 6, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 161 (Matthews v. Citizens Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Citizens Bank, 46 S.W.2d 161, 329 Mo. 556, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 736 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

Ejectment for forty acres of land in Dunklin County. The case was tried in Pemiscot County on change of venue, resulting in a judgment for defendant, and comes to this court by appeal. The petition was filed September 19, 1925, and the trial had at the March Term, 1928, of the trial court.

The petition is conventional in form, against Charles E. and Luther J. Austin, but before the trial the Citizens Bank of Senath became the owner of the land in dispute and was by consent substituted as defendant.

The answer admits defendant's possession and denies the other allegations as to plaintiff's ownership and right to possession. The answer then sets up as an affirmative defense the ten-year Statute *Page 559 of Limitations relating to real estate, claiming that defendant and those under whom it claims title have been in the open, continuous and adverse possession of the land for more than ten years next before the bringing of this action in ejectment, claiming a fee simple title, and that during said time plaintiff has not been in possession of said land or maintained any action for possession thereof.

In order to prove his title to this land, the plaintiff put in evidence the pleadings, proceedings and judgment in a suit to determine and quiet title to the same land brought by this plaintiff, Matthews, against John W. Greer, from whom defendant has acquired its title and possession. That suit was one to try and determine title under our statute, Section 1520, Revised Statutes 1929, was commenced in June, 1918, in the Circuit Court of Dunklin County, was transferred on change of venue to Mississippi County and there tried about 1920 or 1921, resulting in a judgment for defendant. On plaintiff's appeal to this court the judgment therein was reversed and the cause remanded. [Matthews v. Greer, 260 S.W. 53.] This judgment was rendered in this court on March 7, 1924. When the case again reached the circuit court, Charles E. and Luther J. Austin had become the owners of Greer's claimed title and were substituted as parties defendant and the case was retried in Mississippi County and judgment entered for plaintiff on October 24, 1924. Defendants again appealed to this court and the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed here July 30, 1927. [Matthews v. Austin,317 Mo. 1021, 297 S.W. 366.]

At that time the present action in ejectment between the same parties and for the same land was pending in the circuit court. As stated, this plaintiff having finally won in his suit to determine title by the judgment of this court on July 30, 1927, the present case in ejectment for the same land was tried at the March Term, 1928, when defendant won the same land on its plea of adverse possession for ten years. The ten-year period was from 1915 to 1925 and covers the entire time of the pendency of the suit to quiet and determine title commenced in June, 1918, and finally terminated by the judgment of this court on July 30, 1927, which judgment affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court of Mississippi County of October 24, 1924, awarding title to plaintiff. The period of adverse possession for ten years on which defendant won the present case in the trial court commenced some two years before the suit to determine title was brought and ended some four years after the judgment of the circuit court awarding the title to plaintiff, and a little more than a year after the affirmance of that judgment by this court.

The record and brief in this case are devoted largely to the question of defendant's adverse title under the Statute of Limitations. *Page 560 Much evidence was introduced as to the commencement of the possession of defendant and those under whom it claims and the nature and extent of such possession. This question was submitted to the jury on instructions which are not criticised and the jury found for defendant. It will be sufficient to say here that defendant claims, and the evidence shows, that one John Small took actual possession of this forty-acre tract of timbered swamp land in 1911 or 1912, though his possession was not either extensive or substantial. In 1912 Small sold out to John W. Greer and one Dodd and made them a quitclaim deed sufficient to constitute color of title. Dodd and Greer divided the land in 1916, making quitclaim deeds to each other for half thereof, and Dodd soon sold to Greer by his quitclaim deed. These parties cleared the land of timber, put it in cultivation, and built habitable houses thereon in 1912 or 1913. Greer, under whom defendant claims by mesne conveyances, was in actual possession till 1921 or 1922, when his title and possession passed to the Austins, who were the original defendants in this suit.

The plaintiff does not so much question the fact or length of defendant's grantors' actual possession during the ten years or more, but insists that such possession was not adverse in that such grantors did not claim title in fee, but held under the belief and claim that the land was Government land and subject to homestead or purchase from the United States or from Dunklin County as swamp land. There was much evidence to that effect, but we do not think the court could have so held as a matter of law on plaintiff's request for a directed verdict. In fact, it was shown that plaintiff's predecessor in title, claiming under a patent from Dunklin County, brought suit in the Federal court in 1914 to test the title to this land, and defendant's grantor, Greer, employed a lawyer and so vigorously defended his claim to the land that such suit was dismissed in 1916. As we have said, the suit to determine title was then brought in 1918 and defendant's grantors vigorously contested that case both in the circuit court and in this court. There is other evidence of the claim or ownership by defendant's grantors, and if the only question in the case is the sufficiency of the evidence to make a jury question of defendant's claim of title by ten years' adverse possession, we would not disturb the jury's verdict on that question and would affirm the judgment.

The serious question in the case is the effect, if any, of the suit to determine title brought in 1918, not more than four or five years after defendant's adverse possession under claim of title commenced, and not finally decided in plaintiff's favor till a year or more after defendant's title became absolute under the Statute of Limitations, if that is to prevail. We say this because it is the settled law of this State that adverse possession for the period of ten years not *Page 561 only bars recovery by one having a legal title, but destroys that title and vests a perfect title in the adverse holder. [Scannell v. American Soda Fountain Co., 161 Mo. 606; Kirton v. Bull,168 Mo. 622; Franklin v. Cunningham, 187 Mo. 184.] If we affirm the present judgment, the result will be that we will hold thatdefendant acquired and had a fee simple title to this land under the Statute of Limitations at the time this court adjudgedplaintiff to have such title in the suit to determine title.

It is claimed, however, and correctly so, that the question of adverse possession and its effect on the title was not invoked either by the pleadings or the evidence in the suit to determine title. That is necessarily true because at the time that suit was tried the first, and perhaps the second time in the circuit court, defendant's adverse possession was short of the statutory period necessary to vest in him a title to this land. A reading of the record on the two appeals in that case, Matthews v. Greer, 260 S.W. 53, and Matthews v. Austin,

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 161, 329 Mo. 556, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-citizens-bank-mo-1932.